Even America’s closest allies on the 15-member Council, the most powerful body in the U.N. system, voted for the resolution.

The U.S. has voted against a United Nations resolution calling on President Donald Trump to withdraw recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, the first veto exercised by America in the world body in six years.

Mr. Trump on December 6 announced that he would recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move the U.S. embassy there from Tel Aviv, triggering protests and strong condemnation.

Even America’s closest allies on the 15-member Council, the most powerful body in the U.N. system, voted for the resolution.

They warned that Mr. Trump’s announcement about Jerusalem, which upended decades of American policy, threatened to subvert the effort to solve one of the world’s most intractable conflicts.

This was the first veto exercised by the Trump administration and the first one by the U.S. in six years.

“The fact that this veto is being done in defence of American sovereignty and in defence of America’s role in the Middle East peace process is not a source of embarrassment for us; it should be an embarrassment to the remainder of the Security Council,” U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley has said in defence of exercising veto.

“What we witnessed here today in the Security Council is an insult. It is one more example of the U.N. doing more harm than good in addressing the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,” she said on the draft resolution that would have called upon all states to refrain from establishing diplomatic missions in Jerusalem.

“The U.S. will not be told by any country where we can put our embassy... Today, for the simple act of deciding where to put our embassy, the United States was forced to defend its sovereignty. The record will reflect that we did so proudly,” the Indian-origin U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. said.

The resolution calling on Mr. Trump to withdraw recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital was supported by close allies of the U.S. — Britain, France and Japan.

“We disagree with the U.S. decision unilaterally to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel before a final status agreement and to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem,” said British Ambassador to the U.N. Matthew Rycroft.

“As recent events in the region have shown, these decisions are unhelpful to the prospects for peace in the region, an aim that all of us in this Council remain committed to. The British Embassy to Israel is based in Tel Aviv and we have no plans to move it,” Mr. Rycroft said.

Rycroft said that the status of Jerusalem should be determined through a negotiated settlement between the Israelis and the Palestinians, and should ultimately be the shared capital of the Israeli and Palestinian states.

Expressing hope that the U.S. would return to the international consensus, Permanent Representative of France to the United Nations Francois Delattre warned that there was a risk of converting a political conflict into a religious one, from which only the radicals would gain.

Jerusalem was key for peace, he stressed.

Unilateral actions in the current environment risked raising tensions and setting back the possibilities for negotiations towards the two-State solution that the Russian Federation supported, said the Vladimir Safronkov from Russia.

Riyad H. Mansour, Permanent Observer for the State of Palestine, said it is reprehensible that the United States has chosen to disregard international law and undermine its own role in any future peace process.

Palestinians would never accept occupation as a permanent reality, he stressed.

“Those who want peace do not recognise illegal actions and measures but rather recognise the rights of the Palestinian people as enshrined in international law,” he said.

However, Israeli Ambassador Danny Danon said that Mr. Trump had merely stated a fact by recognising that Jerusalem was the capital of Israel.

Many adversaries has sought to delegitimise the Jewish presence in Jerusalem, but the connection with the people had never been broken, and would never be broken, he vowed.